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                  <text>Elks
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NEWS s 2

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 90, Volume 72

Rock slide work
expected to take
6-8 more weeks
Staff Report

ANTIQUITY —
Residents and visitors
in the Antiquity area
will have to continue
to detour a little longer
as work takes place on
the rock and land slide
along State Route 124.
The roadway has
been closed since a
rockfall took place in
late April. The road has
frequently been closed
over the past few years
with rock slides.
ODOT District 10
spokesperson Ashley
Rittenhouse told the
Sentinel that ODOT
currently has a signed
contract with DGM
Inc. for the project.
”The plan is to blast
300 feet of the sandstone rock below the
current landslide and
create a bench that
would catch any future
overburden that could
slide off the hill. The
Contractor has been
building an access to
the top of the hillside
and is starting work
on soil borings today
(Monday),” stated Rit-

tenhouse.
The work will last
approximately 6-8
weeks.
Another ODOT
project taking place in
the region involves US
Route 33 in the Athens
area. Beginning on
Monday, June 11, the
westbound US Route
33 ramps at East State
Street in Athens will be
closed. The closure is
expected to last until
July 25.
The detour for trucks
and commercial trafﬁc
is via US 50E to the
East State Street Exit.
Local trafﬁc will be
detoured to the Stimson Avenue Exit, 16C.
Concrete replacement
work will also begin on
the US 33 EB on-ramp
in this time period.
Temporary pavement
will be installed to
maintain trafﬁc. In
order to discourage
neighborhood cutthrough trafﬁc, Grant
Street will be modiﬁed
to be one way north
through at least the
duration of the ramp
closure period.

Wednesday, June 6, 2018 s 50¢

Kickin’ off summertime

File photo

The Tribute to Truckers will be held on Saturday evening at Kickin’ Summer Bash.

Kickin’ Summer Bash offers activities, entertainment
Staff Report

POMEROY — It’s
beginning to feel like
summertime, and this
weekend will bring the
ﬁrst festival of the year
with Kickin’ Summer
Bash at the Pomeroy
Levee.
With live music, games

and activities for all ages,
as well as the Anything
that Floats event and
Tribute to Truckers, the
Bash has something for
everyone.
Friday evening of the
Kickin’ Summer Bash
begins with the Cruise
In from 5-8 p.m. sponsored by the New Haven

Road Angels and Mark
Porter Chrysler, Dodge,
Jeep and Ram. Come
out whether you are an
owner or an admirer
of ﬁne vehicles and
visit with friends and
neighbors at this event.
Rockin’ Reggie will be on
See SUMMER | 5

LIVE MUSIC

Friday, June 8
7 p.m. — Nick Michael &amp;
Susan Page Orchestra
8 p.m. — The Hopewell
9 p.m. — Aubree Riley
10 p.m. — Renee Stewart
Band
Saturday, June 9
7 p.m. — Brent Patterson
8 p.m. — Cradle &amp; Grave
9 p.m. — Ben Davis Jr.
and Band
10 p.m. — Next Level

Ohio won’t hit
Sept. 8 deadline for Eastern hosts inaugural academic banquet
medical marijuana
REEDSVILLE — A
Staff Report

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio said Tuesday
that it will not have medical marijuana available
by the September deadline, even as a key backer
of recreational marijuana legalization said he’s
using a combination of strategies to continue
expanding access to safe cannabis.
Several cultivators who were close to ramping
up operations experienced inspection delays that
now make it impossible to meet the date set by
Ohio’s 2016 medical marijuana law, Department
of Commerce policy adviser Mark Hamlin said.
“We know that the public expectation and
patient expectation around Sept. 8 was signiﬁcant, so that was really important to us to try
to hit because we know that people have been
counting on that date,” he said. “We don’t take
lightly that the product is not going to be available on that date.”
Hamlin contended that the state is not technically out of compliance with the law, because it
called for the program itself — not the marijuana
— to be ready on the implementation date.
He couldn’t say exactly when sales will begin,
other than as soon as possible. Ohio has licensed
25 large and small growers and on Monday
See MARIJUANA | 2

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

total of 84 students in
grades 3-12 at Eastern
Local were honored at
the district’s academic
banquet.
Eastern Local Schools,
in partnership with the
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings
Company, held its inaugural academic banquet
on May 15.
The evening opened
with Sydney Cook, President of the EHS class of
2018, leading the Pledge
of Allegiance. This was
followed by an invocation given by Kaitlyn
Hawk, chaplain of the
class of 2018
Supt. Steve Ohlinger,
superintendent of
Eastern Local Schools,
served as the master
of ceremonies for the
evening. The keynote
address for the evening
was given by retired
educator and Eastern
Alumni Bill Buckley.
During his career, Buckley served as a teacher
at Wahama High School,
principal of Eastern
High School, Superintendent of Meigs Local
Schools, and in a variety
of other educational
and administrative roles
in the area. Buckley,
through sharing of his
life experiences, spoke
of the importance of
education and how it
can provide for future
success. He encouraged
all students to continue
to maintain their dedication to their studies.
Student awards
were presented to the
students on behalf of
the school by Farmers’

Courtesy photos

Students from third grade through twelfth grade were honored at the Eastern Academic Banquet.

Students from third grade through twelfth grade were honored at the Eastern Academic Banquet.

Bank Board of Directors
member Dave Weber.
Photos were taken by
the Bartees and were
also provided to the
students and their families. All awards, photos,
and honoree meals were
sponsored by Farmers

Bank. Catering was provided by the Austin Cole
Culinary Art Co.
Sponsors for the banquet included Farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Co.,
Farmers Bank Tuppers
See EASTERN | 5

HONORING
STUDENTS

The top 10 percent of
students in grades 3-12
at Eastern Local were
honored at the district’s
inaugural academic
banquet.

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
FISHER
GALLIPOLIS — Carolyn E. Fisher, 71, Gallipolis,
died Sunday, June 3, 2018, in the Emergency Department at the Holzer Medical Center.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m., Friday, June 8,
2018, in the Cremeens-King Funeral Home. Ofﬁciating will be Pastor Bob Powell. Interment will be in the
Centenary Cemetery in Green Township. Friends may
call from 6 - 8 p.m., Thursday, at the funeral home.
TIPPIE JR.
BELPRE — Harry James “Jim” Tippie, Jr., 81, of
Belpre, Ohio, died June 3, 2018, at the Parkersburg
Care Center.
Funeral services will be held at noon on Thursday,
June 7, 2018, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in
Coolville, Ohio, with Pastor George Horner ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in the Torch Cemetery, where
military services will be conducted. Visitation will be
held at the funeral home Thursday, from 10 a.m. until
time of service.
LANE
GALLIPOLIS — Gregory Lee ‘Greg’ Lane, 62, of
Gallipolis, died on Monday morning June 4, 2018 at
his home.
Memorial services will be 6 p.m. Friday June 8,
2018 at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home with
Pastor Randy Carnes ofﬁciating. Friends may call at
the funeral home on Friday from 4 p.m. until the time
of service. Masonic services will be conducted at 6:45
p.m. by Ohio Valley Lodge #536.
EVANS
PEDRO, Ohio — Austin Eddie Evans, 82, of Pedro,
Ohio died Saturday, June 2, 2018 at Kings Daughters
Medical Center, Ashland, Ky.
Funeral service will be 1 p.m., Friday, June 8, 2018
at Decatur Missionary Baptist Church, Decatur, Ohio
with Pastor Brian Phillips and Pastor Calvin Ray
Evans ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Vernon cemetery with military graveside rites provided by VFW
Post 8850. Visitation will be Thursday 6 p.m. until 8
p.m. at Phillips Funeral Home, 1004 South Seventh
Street, Ironton, Ohio. The body will lie in state at the
church one hour prior to the service.

MEIGS BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event information that is open to the public and will be printed
on a space-available basis.

2018 Kickin’ Summer
Bash returning June 8-9
POMEROY —The Kickin’ Summer Bash is returning this year on June 8-9. The festivities will begin
at 4 p.m. on Friday, June 8 with a cruise in until 8
p.m. (prizes will be given), live entertainment will be
going on from 7 p.m.-11 p.m. On Saturday at 2 p.m.
the “anything that ﬂoats race” (prizes will be given)
and kids chalk drawing contest (prizes will be given)
will be going on, from 3 p.m.-8 p.m. games will be
provided by Meigs Inﬂatables, at 4 p.m. there will be a
kids treasure hunt (prizes will be given), from 5 p.m.8 p.m., there will be a tribute to the truckers, from
5:30 p.m.- 6:30 p.m., the kickin’ summer showcase, at
6:30 p.m. goodies will be given away, from 7 p.m.-11
p.m. live entertainment will be going on, and at 8 p.m.
lighted boat parade (prizes will given) will be going
on. This festival gives back to the community. The
event will have water slides, games for the kids, face
painting, free goodies, entertainment, concessions,
and retail.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

June 10
REEDSVILLE —The Bethel Church will be hosting
a free movie night on Sunday, June 10, 6 p.m. The
movie showing will be “I Can Only Imagine.” Free
bottled water and popcorn will be available to guests.
Also, the youth ministry will be selling hot dogs,
candy, and other snacks before the movie.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

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Telephone: 740-992-2155
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Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
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bhunt@aimmediamidwest.com

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mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

Courtesy photo

Pictured are Exalted Ruler Bob Marchi and PER Walton Brown, representing the Gallipolis Elks, presenting cerebral palsy grant
checks to Suzanne Eachus, principal, Guiding Hand School, Gallia County Board of Developmental Disabilities and Kay Davis,
superintendent, Meigs County Board of Developmental Disabilities.

Gallipolis Elks presents grants
Exalted Ruler Bob Marchi and
PER Walton Brown recently presented cerebral palsy grant checks
to Suzanne Eachus, principal,
Guiding Hand School, Gallia
County Board of Developmental
Disabilities and Kay Davis, superintendent, Meigs County Board of
Developmental Disabilities.
The grants, which totaled

$13,514, were provided by the
Ohio Elks Cerebral Palsy Fund
Board which is administered
by the Ohio Elks Association.
Meigs County DD board received
a check for $400 to cover the
expenses of one of their students
to attend summer camp while
Guiding Hand received $800 to
cover the expenses of two stu-

dents.
Eachus is going to use their
grant money to purchase a giant,
interactive sensory light board for
the students while Davis will purchase musical playground pieces.
This year, the Ohio Elks Cerebral Palsy Fund Board provided
$215,176 to cerebral palsy treatment centers throughout Ohio.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel appreciates
your input to the community calendar. To make sure
items can receive proper attention, all information
should be received by the newspaper at least ﬁve
business days prior to an event. All coming events
print on a space-available basis and in chronological order. Events can be emailed to: TDSnews@
aimmediamidwest.com.

Card Shower
Marvin (Jedie) Milliron of Leading Creek Road,
Middleport, will be 90 on June 13th. Cards may be
sent to him at P.O. Box 10 Pomeroy, Ohio.

Friday, June 8
POMEROY — Inspirational Book Club. The
group will be discussing “Fire in the Night” by
Linda Byler. 10:30 a.m., Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY — Family Movie Night. Watch “A
Wrinkle in Time” at the library. Popcorn and lemonade will be served. 5 p.m. Pomeroy Library.

Monday, June 11

BEDFORD Twp. — The Bedford Township trustees monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the Bedford Town
Hall.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Republican
Executive Committee will meet 7:30 p.m. at the
RACINE — Summer Reading Kickoff Event. The headquarters on Second Street and Mechanic
ﬁrst event of the Summer Reading Program includes Street, Pomeroy, to organize the executive committee for the 2018-2020 term.
bounce houses, face painting and more. Free and
open to all. 2-4 p.m., Racine Library.

Wednesday, June 6

Thursday, June 7
RACINE — The regular monthly meeting of the
Sutton Township Trustees will be held on Thursday,
June, commencing at 7 p.m. in the Racine Village
Hall Council Chambers.
CHESTER — Chester Shade Historical Association regular monthly board meeting, 6:30 p.m.,
Chester Academy, discussing Meigs Heritage Festival and other related business, open to all.
CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio Council
of Governments (SOCOG) will hold its board meeting at 10 a.m. at 848 Adena Road, Chillicothe, Ohio,
45601. Board meetings usually are held the ﬁrst
Thursday of the month. For more information, call
740-775-5030, ext. 103.

Marijuana

much and have it be like,
we’re just that incompetent.”
Hamlin said that critiFrom page 1
cism is unfair.
James, founder and
awarded 56 dispensary
president of Green
licenses.
Light Acquisitions LLC,
Ian James, who ran
outlined a well-funded,
the unsuccessful ballot
multi-pronged approach
campaign to legalize
for how his various
both recreational and
business and political
medical marijuana in
interests are pushing for2015, likened a series
ward on $250 million of
of missteps with the
related projects.
program — including a
“For us to think that
convicted felon placed
on an application screen- by keeping it illegal we’re
going to stop people
ing committee, shared
is just simply fantasy,”
passwords and missed
deadlines — to a classic James said, noting that
polls show 14 percent of
satirical comedy.
Ohioans use marijuana
“It’s kind of like ‘The
regularly and another 14
Producers,’” he said.
percent would if it were
“You almost have to
legalized. “You can’t
wonder if the state was
smother a black market
taking its cue from Mel
Brooks, purposely sabo- by just saying ‘Say No
To Drugs.’”
taging (the program)
James said his busifrom the outset, knowing
ness has developed
that the Kasich admina line of therapeutic
istration doesn’t really
want medical marijuana lotions, soaps and sprays
to work in Ohio. Because using cannabidiol that
he’s marketing to large
you can’t fumble this

Tuesday, June 12
POMEROY — Acoustic Night. Join in this informal jam session. Guitars, banjos, and more are welcome. Singers and listeners invited as well. 6 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Board of
Health meeting will take place at 5 p.m. in the conference room of the Meigs County Health Department, which is located at 112 E. Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Wednesday, June 13
POMEROY — Rock Exploration with Meigs Soil
&amp; Water. 2 p.m., Pomeroy Library.

national retailers, including Urban Outﬁtters and
Sephora. The ﬁrm also is
moving into insurance,
pet products and beverages, he said.
James said his plans
to pursue another constitutional amendment
legalizing marijuana
for personal use, which
would likely appear on
the 2020 ballot, haven’t
been dampened by a
competing proposal. He
said that ballot issue has
a “fatal ﬂaw” that his
lawyers believe would
open the resulting marijuana market up to widespread abuse.
James also wants to
see state lawmakers act.
He said he’s again pushing a so-called “Fresh
Start Act,” which calls
for purging non-violent
marijuana crimes that
are now legal from
offenders’ records. If
lawmakers don’t act, he
said his campaign organization would push it to
the ballot as an initiated

statute.
Another bill he’s
advocating would open
Ohio to hemp cultivation
that’s now legal in many
surrounding states, a
proposal James said is
backed by the American
Farm Bureau.
Green Light attorney
Ted Bibart said creating
good cannabis policy is
key to advocates’ ultimate goal.
“The goal is to continue to constantly educate,” he said, “but also
to develop these industries in such a way that
it will be mainstreamed,
that they’re done safely,
that they’re done appropriately, and that they’re
done within the law so
that they encourage regulatory frameworks that
will be the undergirding
of a fall of prohibition
the same way we saw
with alcohol — but far
more responsibly done
and with a focus on
health and healing and
wellness.”

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 6, 2018 3

Free admission to New Haven pool
By Mindy Kearns

Cathy Zerkle.
A public hearing was
held during the meeting
for the third and ﬁnal
NEW HAVEN —
Money won’t be an issue reading of a bond ordinance that will fund the
for anyone wanting to
cool off this summer with town’s upcoming water
project.
a relaxing swim in the
Todd Swanson, attorBend Area.
Mayor Jerry Spradling ney with Steptoe and
Johnson, read the ordiannounced at the most
recent town council meet- nance and answer quesing that there will be free tions from the townspeople attending. The conadmission to the New
tract for the project was
Haven Municipal Swimawarded to Mike Enyart
ming Pool for the entire
and Sons Construction,
season.
which submitted the low
The news came after
bid of $4,436,793.70.
the recent appointment
Councilman Matt Shell
of a pool committee,
noted the bid was much
which raised $5,000 to
lower than the projected
make the plan a reality.
Members will continue to estimate.
Chris Rizer of the
work year round to secure
funding for the future, so Mason County Historical
there will be no question and Preservation Society
approached the counas to whether the pool
cil, asking if the town
will open each season.
Pool committee members would assist with the
include Lisa Crump, Lisa maintenance of two local
cemeteries if the society
Honaker, Alice Humphrey, Phyllis Arthur, and completed an initial

Special to the Register

clean-up.
Rizer said the Capehart Cemetery is located
next to the town water
tower, and has no legal
owner. The Odd Fellows Cemetery began in
the Civil War era and is
believed to be one of the
ﬁrst in the area. Each
cemetery has between
150 and 200 graves.
The council voted to
mow each cemetery once
a year prior to Memorial Day, once the initial
clean-up has taken place.
Police Chief Dave
Hardwick told the council his department is
losing three part-time
ofﬁcers, due to the added
commitments to their
full-time jobs. He asked,
and was granted permission, to hire one full-time
ofﬁcer to work nights
and weekends.
The chief said he will
advertise and begin
taking applications. He
added his ﬁrst prefer-

NO CHARGE
Mayor Jerry Spradling
announced at the most
recent town council
meeting that there will
be free admission to the
New Haven Municipal
Swimming Pool for the
entire season.

ence is a certiﬁed ofﬁcer, but if one does not
apply, will hire an uncertiﬁed patrolman.
In other action, the
council:
Heard a report from
the mayor that a meeting will be held soon to
see if there is interest in
a neighborhood watch
program; and,
Announced the farmers market will begin
at the park on June 2,
and each Saturday after,
from 8 a.m. to noon.
Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer
for Ohio Valley Publishing, email her
at mindykearns1@hotmail.com.

ODNR looking for input on trails
Staff Report

The Werry and Life families announce the
engagement and upcoming marriage of Dr. Morgan R. Werry to Mr. Kyle Gordon, both of Chester,
Ohio. The wedding will take place on June 9,
2018.

MEIGS BRIEFS

Middleport yard of the week
MIDDLEPORT — A yard of the week program
is beginning June 1 in the Village of Middleport.
Each week, out of town judges will judge yards in
the village, with a yard of the week to be selected
from one of the following: yards, porches, entry
ways, planter boxes, or overall neatness. One
“Yard of the Week” will be selected each week.
Only properties within the village limits will be
judged.

Road closure
RACINE — A bridge replacement project
begins on May 29, 2018, on County Road 29
(Bowmans Run Road) in Meigs County. The project is taking place .17 miles off of County Road 34
(Pine Grove Road). The road will be closed in this
area through August 31, 2018.
RACINE — A portion of State Route 124 in
Meigs County is closed due to a rockfall. It is
located between Yellow Bush Road and McNickles
Road. The road is closed in both directions in this
area. ODOT’s detour is SR 124 to SR 733 to US
33 to SR 124. The reopening date is unknown at
this time.

Scholarship application
POMEROY – The Meigs County Retired Teachers Association is seeking applicants for the 2018
scholarship. Meigs County residents who are college juniors and seniors majoring in education are
encouraged to apply. Contact Charlene 740-4445498 or Becky 740-992-7096 for applications and
information.
BIG SALE

OUR 55th YEAR

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Morgan McKinniss | OVP

While Gallia County boasts many miles of trails and there are multiple state parks in surrounding
counties, Gallia itself does not have any state trails. Meigs County features Forked Run State Park.
Raccoon Creek County Park (pictured) in Gallia is a popular hiking destination.

lowed by facilitated input
from meeting attendees
to help chart a future for
recreational trails across
Ohio. A meeting will be
held in each region. Gallia
and Meigs Counties are
a part of the southeast
region, which will be held
Thursday June 28 at the
Division four Wildlife
Ofﬁce, 360 East State
Street, Athens.
People should RSVP for
these meetings to ODNR
Trails Coordinator Tom
Arbour at tom.arbour@
dnr.state.oh.us or 614265-6575.
Ohio continues to
strive to be a leader in
providing sustainable
trails for all users offering
an extraordinary network

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OPINIONS
WANTED
ODNR and the Ohio
Trails Partnership are
requesting feedback to
create the state’s next
plan for recreational
trails of all types
throughout Ohio.

Holzer is proud to
announce that
Ron Tawney, FNP,
Pediatric and
Adolescent
Medicine, has
joined our team
of highly skilled
professionals.

of world-class recreation
and transportation opportunities linking communities, people and places
while stimulating economic and social vitality.
ODNR ensures a balance between wise use
and protection of our natural resources for the beneﬁt of all. Visit the ODNR
website at ohiodnr.gov.

IN BRIEF

2 charged in
bizarre death

CHICAGO (AP) — Illinois’ imprisoned ex-governor, Rod Blagojevich,
has ﬁled paperwork asking President
Donald Trump to commute his 14-year
prison term for corruption that included seeking to sell an appointment to the
Senate seat Barack Obama vacated to
become president.
A spokesman for Blagojevich’s lawyers told the Chicago Tribune it was
submitted Tuesday to the Department
of Justice. The Chicago Sun-Times
reports the paperwork is a formality
and that Trump doesn’t necessarily
require it to act.
Trump last week broached the possibility of freeing the 61-year-old, suggesting the one-time “Celebrity Apprentice”
contestant was convicted for “being stupid.” But many Illinois voters regarded
Blagojevich’s corruption as brazen.
His convictions included attempting to
extort a children’s hospital.
Blagojevich’s wife, Patti, recently
went on a media blitz to encourage
Trump to intervene to reduce her husband’s sentence.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — More
than a year after a developmentally
disabled Missouri man’s body was
found encased in concrete, two people
who are accused in a lawsuit of making him ﬁght for their entertainment
have been charged in his death, a
prosecutor announced Tuesday.
Sherry Paulo, 53, and Anthony
R. Flores, 58, both of Fulton, were
arrested and charged Tuesday with
involuntary manslaughter in 61-yearold Carl DeBrodie’s death. They were
also charged with client neglect,
felony abandonment of a corpse, and
two misdemeanors of making a false
report of a missing person.
Paulo and Flores were responsible
for DeBrodie’s care at Second Chance
Homes in Fulton. Investigators say
DeBrodie went missing from the
home in the fall of 2016, but that his
disappearance wasn’t reported until
April 17, 2017, a week before his body
was found in a container encased in
concrete inside a Fulton storage unit.

Ron Tawney completed his Master of Science in Nursing at Walden
University in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and completed his Bachelor
of Science in Nursing at University of Rio Grande in Rio Grande,
Ohio. He has worked as a Registered Nurse for Holzer on a variety of
patient units since 2013. Tawney is Board Certiﬁed by the American
Nurses Credentialing Center and is seeing patients at our locations in
Gallipolis, Jackson, and Pomeroy in Ohio.

Schedule an appointment!
1.855.4HOLZER (1.855.446.5937)
OH-70055816

Ex-gov seeks
commutation

www.holzer.org

OH-70054986

COLUMBUS — The
Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR)
will host ﬁve regional
meetings for everyone
from trail managers to
planners to advocates to
trail users.
The focus of these
meetings is to garner
ideas, which will formulate a state plan for recreational trails. This plan
helps to set funding priorities of the State’s Clean
Ohio Trails Fund and
the federal Recreational
Trails Program. Topics
of discussion will include
nature trails, multi-use
and greenway paths,
water trails, motorized
recreational trails, equestrian trails and mountain
bike trails.
Ohio offers more than
5,000 miles of trails for
hiking, biking, bridle,
mountain biking and
water trails. Trails
improve quality of life
and boost outdoor recreational opportunities for
all Ohioans, by allowing
families and friends to
participate in outdoor
activities close to home.
ODNR and the Ohio
Trails Partnership are
requesting feedback to
create the state’s next
plan for recreational trails
of all types throughout
Ohio.
Each meeting will
begin at 2 p.m. with a
short presentation fol-

Werry-Gordon
Engagement

�Opinion
4 Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Let’s work to
end stigma of
mental illness
My aunt died on May 3, 2017, emaciated, yellow
with jaundice, but clear-headed for the ﬁrst time
in years. Sobriety and good medical treatment will
do that. For a brief while, we met the
real her. She was kind, funny, and
Kate
wise.
Barikmo
But Aunt “Carol” (not her real
Contributing
name) will live mostly in our memocolumnist
ries as a terror. She was tormented
and resistant to help. She left behind
a dusty house and a grieving, angry family.
It didn’t have to be this way.
In recent months, we’ve been hearing a lot
about mental illness, due to incidents of violence.
In April, a man with a long history of mental illness allegedly killed four people at a Wafﬂe House
in Nashville, Tenn. That same month, a mentally
ill homeless man allegedly stabbed a diner to
death in a restaurant in Ventura, Calif.
Most people with mental health issues aren’t
violent. In fact, they are responsible for only 3 to
5 percent of violent acts. But it seems that it takes
acts of violence to get us to even discuss this common afﬂiction. And just opening up the conversation would be a big step.
Most mental illness starts with mild symptoms
— ones that could be potentially be managed with
medications. Half of mental illness cases begin by
age 14, and three-quarters begin by age 24. When
early issues are ignored, they can become much
larger problems.
Aunt Carol’s mental health got worse with age.
Our family knew about her depression and obsessive compulsive disorder. We knew how she’d
break from reality, get angry, belligerent, and
impossible to reach. But no one knew the extent
of her disease.
Carol was also an alcoholic; addicts are nearly
twice as likely to suffer from mental illness.
In the end, it was alcoholism that put her in the
hospital — and, ironically, provided the opening
for appropriate medical care. Her life is a perfect
example of what society does to the mentally ill.
First we ignore. Then we deny. Then we realize,
perhaps too late, how critical the situation has
become.
And, of course, like many people, my aunt struggled to hide her mental health issues. After all,
who wants to admit they are ﬁghting their own
brain? But, in fact, one in ﬁve adults have experienced some form of mental illness.
So instead of brushing it under the rug, let’s talk
about it. Urge a loved one to see a doctor. Support
community health programs for those without
insurance (or the underinsured). Vote for politicians who advocate for better health care. Know
that it’s okay to reach out for help.
The National Alliance on Mental Illness lists
tips for ﬁghting the stigma as individuals. “Talk
Openly About Mental Health” is number one.
Another critical element is prioritizing health
care. In May, a panel of experts at the American
Psychiatric Association’s annual meeting recommended a single-payer system as the best way to
deliver appropriate mental health care. Short of
that, we can improve our current system. In Congress right now is the CHIP Mental Health Parity
Act, which aims to deliver a broad range of mental
health services to low-income children.
But whatever happens with health care policy,
we all can play a role in helping someone who
lives with mental illness, whether it’s mild depression or something more severe. By simply having
conversations about mental health, we can make a
positive difference.
My aunt’s brain was consumed by her illness;
then her body was consumed by alcohol. But her
story will not be consumed by the taboo surrounding mental health. I will not let that happen.
Kate Barikmo just graduated from University of Wisconsin — Madison
with her bachelor’s in history, sociology, and educational services.
This column was written for the Progressive Media Project, which is
run by The Progressive magazine, and distributed by Tribune News
Service.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Singer-songwriter Gary “U.S.” Bonds is 79.
Country singer Joe Stampley is 75. Jazz musician Monty Alexander is 74. Actor Robert
Englund is 71. Folk singer Holly Near is 69.
Singer Dwight Twilley is 67. Playwright-actor
Harvey Fierstein (FY’-ur-steen) is 66. Comedian
Sandra Bernhard is 63. International Tennis Hall
of Famer Bjorn Borg is 62. Actress Amanda Pays
is 59. Comedian Colin Quinn is 59. Record producer Jimmy Jam is 59. Rock musician Steve Vai
is 58. Rock singer-musician Tom Araya (Slayer)
is 57. Actor Jason Isaacs is 55. Actor Anthony
Starke is 55. Rock musician Sean Yseult (White
Zombie) is 52. Actor Max Casella is 51. Actor
Paul Giamatti is 51. Rhythm and blues singer
Damion Hall (Guy) is 50. Rock musician Bardi
Martin is 49. Rock musician James “Munky”
Shaffer (Korn) is 48.

THEIR VIEW

Trusting internal navigation
I barely turned the
wheel. I was running
75 mph and don’t know
how I avoided the tree
straddling the road 40
feet ahead. No crash.
No scratching along the
side of my car. The most
abrasive sound was in my
head as I grappled with
the question of how I’d
entirely missed that tree.
We expect our cars to
respond within seconds,
but not to instantaneously avoid an imminent accident, but often
with divine intervention
they do, and that single
moment changes the
course of our journey.
Maybe we should pivot
our attitudes just as
quickly when feel guided,
especially, when we see
the direction our day is
taking or the life we envision slipping away.
Awareness provides
opportunity for change,
whether it be growth or
regression, what seems
the most insigniﬁcant
choice in our daily lives
can alter our lives dra-

and feel peace
matically just like
more when I am
the slightest turn of
truly present in
the wheel can.
each moment.
Maybe we should
This means I am
accept that gut
not thinking of
feeling that tells us
the past, nor plansomething we are
ning the future.
about to do or say Michele
It means I am
is not in our best
Zirkle
interest, instantly
Contributing focused on the
conversation I’m
switching our
columnist
in and thoroughly
attitude and our
breathing in the
actions to match
the feeling in our hearts. salty sea breeze on the
beach or tasting my sucHow do we do this—
live every moment to the culent salmon. Beyond
simple pleasures becomfullest with full expresing more pleasurable,
sion of self and our
each decision made from
desires without being
us when we are fullyreckless and without
making choices with little conscious with an open
heart creates situations
regard for the consequences? How can we be that match our authentic
desires.
brave enough to dismiss
Opportunities we
the judgmental opinions
of others and express our hadn’t considered present themselves when we
ideas in unconventional
root into the recess of joy
ways? By instantly recognizing the advice from we are all born with that
lies within the seat of our
the inner sage that lives
souls in our solar plexus.
inside us and by making
People and events that
decisions that are true
correspond to the very
to our feelings in each
vibration of our cells gravmoment.
itate to us when we live
I’ve found I regret less

authentically and totally
in the moment.
Power is inherent in
the present—and only in
the present. The past and
future wield no power
over us if we aren’t living
there—if our consciousness is residing in our
physical body in the present. The power to create,
avoid and build lies in
each breath.
The power to steer
yourself into another
lane, off the road or onto
a completely alternate
highway is at your ﬁngertips. The wheel is in your
hands. Just remember,
the decision to alter your
reality and change course
will seem effortless when
you notice the scenery
is not to your liking and
you are ready to live
your passion and trust
your internal navigation
system.
Michele Zirkle is a published author,
life coach and energy healer. Her
radio show can be accessed at
www.lifespeaks.info. She can be
reached at www.zirksquirks@gmail.
com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
In 1933, the ﬁrst
drive-in movie theater
was opened by Richard
Hollingshead in Camden
County, New Jersey. (The
Today’s Highlight in History movie shown was “Wives
Beware,” starring AdolOn June 6, 1968, Sen.
phe Menjou.)
Robert F. Kennedy died
In 1944, during World
at Good Samaritan HosWar II, Allied forces
pital in Los Angeles, 25
stormed the beaches of
1/2 hours after he was
Normandy, France, on
shot by Sirhan Bishara
“D-Day” as they began
Sirhan.
the liberation of German-occupied Western
On this date
Europe.
In 1523, Gustav Vasa
In 1966, black activbecame Sweden’s new
ist James Meredith was
king, Gustav I.
shot and wounded as he
In 1654, Queen Christina of Sweden abdicated; walked along a Mississipshe was succeeded by her pi highway to encourage
cousin, Charles X Gustav. black voter registration.
In 1978, California
In 1799, American polivoters overwhelmingly
tician and orator Patrick
approved Proposition 13,
Henry died at Red Hill
a primary ballot initiative
Plantation in Virginia.
In 1809, Sweden adopt- calling for major cuts in
property taxes.
ed a new constitution.
In 1982, Israeli forces
In 1918, U.S. Marines
suffered heavy casualties invaded Lebanon to drive
Palestine Liberation
as they launched their
Organization ﬁghters
eventually successful
out of the country. (The
counteroffensive against
Israelis withdrew in June
German troops in the
World War I Battle of Bel- 1985.)
In 1994, President Bill
leau Wood in France.
Clinton joined leaders
In 1925, Walter Percy
from America’s World
Chrysler founded the
War II allies to mark the
Chrysler Corp.
Today is Wednesday,
June 6, the 157th day of
2018. There are 208 days
left in the year.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“To win without risk is to triumph without
glory.”
— Pierre Corneille (KOHR’-nay-uh)
French dramatist (born this date in 1606, died 1684)

50th anniversary of the
D-Day invasion of Normandy. A China Northwest Airlines passenger
jet crashed near Xian
(SHEE’-ahn), killing all
160 people on board.
Ten years ago: The
Dow industrial average
dropped 394.64 points
to 12,209.81, its worst
loss in more than a year.
Crude futures soared
nearly $11 for the day to
$138.54 a barrel. Actor
Bob Anderson, who
played young George
Bailey in “It’s a Wonderful Life,” died in Palm
Springs, California, at age
75.
Five years ago: Director
of National Intelligence
James Clapper moved
to tamp down a public
uproar spurred by the
disclosure of secret surveillance programs involving phone and Internet
records, declassifying key
details about one of the

programs while insisting
the efforts were legal,
limited in scope and necessary to detect terrorist
threats. Russian President
Vladimir Putin and his
wife, Lyudmila Putina,
announced they were
divorcing after nearly 30
years of marriage. Esther
Williams, 91, the swimming champion turned
actress, died in Los Angeles. Longtime soap opera
actress Maxine Stuart,
94, died in Beverly Hills,
California.
One year ago: Bill Cosby’s chief accuser, Andrea
Constand, took the stand
at his sexual assault trial
to tell her story publicly
for the ﬁrst time, saying
the comedian groped her
after giving her three blue
pills that left her paralyzed and helpless. (The
jury deadlocked, resulting
in a mistrial, but Cosby
was convicted in a second
trial.)

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 6, 2018 5

Eastern

Driggs, Emma Edwards,
Emmalyn Hayes,
Hope Reed, and Karey
Schreckengost;
From page 1
Seventh Grade —
Savannah Barnes, Ella
Plains Branch, Eastern
Carleton, Juli Durst,
Local Board of EducaTrey Hill, Jensen Litchtion, Eastern Local
ﬁeld, Trenton Morrissey,
Administration and
Bella Mugrage, Koen
Faculty, Eastern Local
Sellers, Jacob Spencer,
Education Association,
and Lillyann Suttle;
Bartee Photography,
Eighth Grade —
Eastern Elementary
PTO, Locker 219, Qual- Lindsie Davis, Emma
Doczi, Emma Epling,
ity Print Shop, Austin
Cole Culinary Art Com- Jayden Evans, Kendyl
Householder, Malachi
pany, and Bethel WorMartindale, Megan
ship Center.
Maxon, Brielle Newland,
Student honorees
and Riley Pierce;
included:
Ninth Grade — Jake
Third Grade — Mason
Barber, Olivia Barber,
Casto, Lilly Driggs,
Matthew Blanchard,
Cashton Hill, Wesley
Honaker, Dawson King, Layna Catlett, Jenna
Chadwell, and Skylar
Greyson Lantz, Sydney
Honaker;
Mora, Nicole NottingTenth Grade — Faith
ham, Makenna Rankin,
Bauerbach, Haylie
Makenzie Robertson,
Blankenship, Shannan
Lalia Roush, Carson
Brewer, Michael Letson,
VanMeter, and Rylie
Aubree Lyons, Derrick
White;
Fourth Grade — Caleb Metheney, Kristyn Stewart, and Emily VanMeAbner, Derrick Barnes,
ter;
Olivia Householder,
Eleventh Grade —
Joyce James, Colton
Hannah Damewood,
Lloyd, Tyler Miller,
Hunter Needs, and Alli- Emmalea Durst, Blaise
Facemyer, Chase King,
son Rivera;
Fifth Grade — Cooper Mollie Maxon, Jessica
Parker, and Garrett Rees;
Barnett, Sydneyahna
Twelfth Grade — JesCard, Audry Clingensica Adams, Elayna
peel, Owen Davis, WIlBissell, Taylor Carleton,
liam Gaddis, Joseph
Sidney Cook, Kaitlyn
Putnam, Kayla Sellers,
Hawk and Morgain
Gavan Smith, Rylan
Little.
Weeks, and Addison
Well;
Information provided by Eastern
Sixth Grade — HanMiddle School Principal Bill
nah Bearhs, Victoria
Francis.

File photo

Kids will once again sift through the sand for treasure on Saturday at the Kickin’ Summer Bash.

Summer

Move over and watch
the big rigs arrive in
town on Main Street
from 5-8 p.m. for a Tribute to the Truckers “Up
Close and Personal”.
“We are thanking the
big wheelers who risk
their lives every day
hauling everything we
use in life each day. The
event is ‘Up close and
Personal’ and allows the
bash goers the chance
to meet and tour their
rigs. Come and thank a
trucker and see their life
styles,” explained Roush.
At 5:30 p.m. will be
the Kickin’ Summer
Showcase sponsored by
Wolfe Mountain Entertainment. The showcase
featuring several local
performers will take
place on the Gazebo
Stage.
At 6:30 p.m. a drawing will take place to get
“free stuff.” Be sure and
get a ticket from the tent
in “the dip.” Only one
ticket per person will

ets and be 16 or over.
Also at 2 p.m. all the
activities start for the
kids. At 2 p.m. there will
From page 1
be a chalk drawing contest with prize money
hand to provide music
for kids up to age 6 and
during the cruise in.
kids up to age 12 in the
Live music will take
amounts of $25 for ﬁrst
place at the amphiplace, $15 for second
theater beginning at 7
place and $10 for third
p.m. The lineup for the
place. This event is sponevening includes Nick
Michael and Susan Page sored by The Vaughan
Agency.
Orchestra at 7 p.m.;
From 3 to 8 p.m.
The Hopewell at 8 p.m.;
Meigs Inﬂatables will be
Aubree Riley at 9 p.m.;
on the parking lot ready
and the Renee Stewart
to play games and share
Band at 10 p.m.
On Saturday, the Any- fun on their slides and
bounce houses. Inﬂatathing that Floats race
bles are free.
will take place at the
When 4 p.m. arrives
boat levee at 2 p.m. The
prize money up for grabs watch for all the little
treasure hunters who
is $125 for ﬁrst place;
will be sifting through
$75 for second place;
the sand for those gold
and $50 for third place.
coins that have real
“We’ve had some
really creative entries in value. Only kids up to
11 years of age will be
past years. Come join
allowed to participate in
the fun,” said organizer
this event. A scavenger
Brenda Roush. There is
hunt will be taking place
no entry fee but participants must have life jack- for the teens ages 12-17.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

58°

69°

71°

Mostly sunny and pleasant today. Mainly clear
tonight. High 76° / Low 50°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

Precipitation

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.00
0.10
0.74
21.84
18.82

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:04 a.m.
8:51 p.m.
1:54 a.m.
1:10 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

Jun 6

New

First

Full

Jun 13 Jun 20 Jun 28

SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for ﬁsh and game.

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Major
6:28a
7:12a
7:55a
8:37a
9:19a
10:05a
10:56a

Minor
12:15a
1:01a
1:43a
2:25a
3:07a
3:52a
4:41a

0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
6:50p
7:35p
8:18p
9:00p
9:45p
10:32p
11:24p

Minor
12:39p
1:23p
2:06p
2:49p
3:32p
4:19p
5:10p

WEATHER HISTORY
D-Day took place in Normandy,
France, on this date in 1944. The assault that helped the Allies win World
War II came with partial clearing after
a storm that produced record low
barometer readings.

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
75/50

High

Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
300

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone
Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
13.43
18.12
22.40
12.48
13.02
25.28
12.23
26.79
34.69
12.79
21.60
34.20
20.90

24-hr.
Chg.
+1.54
+0.79
+0.31
-0.23
none
+0.59
none
-0.31
-0.26
-0.30
+0.50
-0.30
+0.50

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Logan
72/48

SUNDAY

92°
67°

85°
58°

Hot with sunshine and A couple of showers
patchy clouds
and a thunderstorm

Times of clouds and
sun

Marietta
71/48

Murray City
71/47
Belpre
72/49

Athens
72/48

85°
64°
Sunshine

Today

St. Marys
72/49

Parkersburg
71/50

Coolville
72/49

Elizabeth
73/49

Spencer
73/48

Buffalo
75/50
Milton
75/51

St. Albans
75/49

Huntington
76/53

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
75/53
100s
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
65/55
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
T-storms
Los Angeles
75/58
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
75/51

Ashland
75/51
Grayson
76/52

MONDAY

84°
60°

Wilkesville
73/49
POMEROY
Jackson
74/49
74/50
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
74/50
75/50
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
75/54
GALLIPOLIS
76/50
75/50
75/50

South Shore Greenup
76/51
75/51

74
0 50 100 150 200

Portsmouth
76/52

SATURDAY

Partly sunny

McArthur
72/48

Very High

Primary: pine, grass, other
Mold: 2478
Moderate

Chillicothe
73/51

Courtesy photo

Supt. Steve Ohlinger addresses the honorees at the banquet.

90°
62°

Adelphi
72/49

Waverly
73/49

Pollen: 85

Low

MOON PHASES

FRIDAY

Mostly sunny and
nice

1

Primary: cladosporium
Thu.
6:03 a.m.
8:52 p.m.
2:24 a.m.
2:09 p.m.

THURSDAY

84°
56°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

81°
52°
80°
59°
96° in 1899
41° in 1946

Information provided by Brenda
Roush.

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

be given and eligible to
receive prizes.
From 7 to 11 p.m. the
entertainment begins
and the Saturday evening line up will be
Brent Patterson at 7
p.m.; Cradle &amp; Grave at
8 p.m.; Ben Davis Jr. and
Band at 9 p.m.; and Next
Level at 10 p.m.
At 8 p.m. the boats
will begin to “parade”
around in the middle of
the river in front of the
amphitheater so that
those in attendance can
vote on their favorite
people’s choice award
for their lighting theme
of their boats. Prize dollars will be given in the
amount of $125 for ﬁrst
place; $75 for second
place; and $50 for third
place.
For more information
on the event visit the
Kickin’ Summer Bash
Facebook page.

Clendenin
74/46
Charleston
74/50

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
72/49
Montreal
67/53

Billings
81/56

Toronto
Minneapolis
67/56
79/60
Detroit
73/58

New York
72/57
Washington
73/59

Chicago
79/64
Denver
88/57

Kansas City
91/69

Chihuahua
97/70

Thu.
Hi/Lo/W
94/62/pc
59/48/c
91/69/s
69/59/s
76/60/s
80/56/pc
86/57/pc
71/58/pc
84/59/s
86/67/pc
84/53/t
81/60/pc
84/64/s
82/64/pc
82/64/pc
94/73/s
91/60/pc
85/68/pc
81/64/pc
86/75/c
94/73/pc
88/67/pc
81/69/pc
99/74/s
93/70/s
75/60/pc
88/64/s
87/76/t
81/64/pc
90/65/s
92/76/pc
73/62/pc
93/69/pc
86/71/t
77/62/s
106/79/s
79/59/pc
67/57/pc
83/67/pc
81/63/s
93/71/s
91/63/s
65/54/pc
72/54/pc
79/61/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
90/69

El Paso
102/74

City
Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
94/63/pc
Anchorage
60/50/pc
Atlanta
90/69/s
Atlantic City
69/56/pc
Baltimore
72/55/pc
Billings
81/56/pc
Boise
88/59/pc
Boston
62/54/pc
Charleston, WV 74/50/pc
Charlotte
88/65/s
Cheyenne
78/52/t
Chicago
79/64/pc
Cincinnati
77/55/pc
Cleveland
68/54/s
Columbus
73/53/s
Dallas
96/75/s
Denver
88/57/t
Des Moines
93/68/pc
Detroit
73/58/s
Honolulu
85/74/c
Houston
95/73/pc
Indianapolis
82/60/s
Kansas City
91/69/s
Las Vegas
101/75/s
Little Rock
91/68/s
Los Angeles
75/58/pc
Louisville
83/60/pc
Miami
89/75/s
Minneapolis
79/60/r
Nashville
90/64/s
New Orleans
88/75/pc
New York City
72/57/pc
Oklahoma City
92/70/s
Orlando
85/71/pc
Philadelphia
73/56/pc
Phoenix
104/77/pc
Pittsburgh
67/51/pc
Portland, ME
62/52/pc
Raleigh
85/62/s
Richmond
78/57/pc
St. Louis
91/71/s
Salt Lake City
92/66/pc
San Francisco
65/55/pc
Seattle
75/53/pc
Washington, DC 73/59/pc

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Low

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�Sports
6 Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Rio’s Criner named 1st team NAIA All-American
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande sophomore shortstop Michaela Criner was named to the 2018
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics Softball All-America First Team
after guiding the RedStorm to a 35-win season and a fourth straight trip to the
NAIA national tournament.

RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
University of Rio Grande
sophomore shortstop Michaela
Criner has been named to the
2018 National Association
of Intercollegiate Athletics
(NAIA) Softball All-America
First Team.
The team, which was selected by the NAIA All-America
committee, was announced
Friday.
Criner, who was a second
team honoree last season,
helped the RedStorm to a
35-win season and a fourth
straight trip to the NAIA
national tournament.
The Bremen, Ohio native,
who was also named the River
States Conference Player of the

Year last month, becomes just
the second player in program
history to be named a ﬁrst
team All-American. Jenny Olding earned the same honor in
2006.
Criner ﬁnished with a teamhigh .534 batting average to go
along with 13 home runs and
49 runs batted in.
She also had nine doubles,
ﬁve triples, a .868 slugging
percentage and a .565 on-base
percentage.
Criner led the country in
batting average, hits per game
(1.938) and total bases per
game (3.146). She ﬁnished
second nationally in total hits
(93) and total bases (151), was
third in slugging percentage,
fourth in runs scored per game
(1.208) and 15th in runs scored
(58).

Criner was the only Rio
Grande player to appear on the
list.
No other player representing a River States Conference
school was honored.
Senior catcher Harlee Donovan of Southern Oregon was
named the NAIA Player of the
Year and freshman Emily Cerny
of Science &amp; Arts (Okla.) was
honored as the NAIA Pitcher of
the Year.
Donovan was tabbed the
2018 Cascade Conference
Player of the Year after batting
.447 (80-for-179) with 12 home
runs, 77 RBI and a .771 slugging percentage. She ranked
No. 2 in the NAIA in RBI and
ninth in total bases (138).
The native of Half Moon Bay,
See NAIA | 7

Capitals on verge of
Cup after blowing
out Golden Knights
WASHINGTON (AP) — Evgeny Kuznetsov
smiled about getting four assists. He tried not to
smile too much at the thought of being one win
away from the Stanley Cup.
With Kuznetsov and goaltender Braden Holtby
leading the way, the Washington Capitals are on
the verge of capturing the ﬁrst title in their 43rd
season after routing the Vegas Golden Knights 6-2
on Monday night to take a commanding 3-1 series
lead.
Alex Ovechkin and the Capitals will get their
ﬁrst chance to hoist the Cup in Game 5 on Thursday night in Las Vegas.
One more win.
“I’ve never been there,” Kuznetsov said after just
the fourth four-assist game in Cup Final history.
“And I don’t really care about that yet, so it’s kind
of easy for me. You know me, I always stay loose
a little bit especially off the games. I’m pretty sure
when game gonna come, we’re gonna a little bit
think about it. It’s pretty hard to not think about
that.”
T.J. Oshie, Tom Wilson and Devante Smith-Pelly
all scored in the ﬁrst period to get the Capitals
rolling against a determined Vegas team that has
not found consistent answers against Holtby, who
stopped 28 shots in another strong showing. The
Golden Knights outchanced the Capitals by a wide
margin but fell apart after James Neal clanked a
shot off the post instead of hitting a wide-open
net early, and the expansion team’s Cinderella run
could be over in a matter of days.
“It probably changes the game,” Neal said. “It’s
probably a different game after that I had a wideopen net, and then I just hit the post.”
John Carlson, Michal Kempny and Brett Connolly also scored as thunderous chants of “We
want the Cup! We want the Cup!” rang out from
the crowd. No team since the Detroit Red Wings
in 1942 has blown a 3-1 lead in the Cup Final.
“It can be easy in a game where you can clinch
to get a little bit ahead of ourselves,” Oshie said.
“But we’ve got a good group of leaders in the room
… and we’ll be focused at the start.”
The Capitals seem to be getting enough bounces
to make up for nine previous ﬁrst- or second-round
playoff exits in the Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom era — and plenty of disappointments in the
previous decades, too.
While Vegas rang several shots off the posts,
the Capitals seized just about every opportunity
as they have throughout this surprising run.
Kuznetsov padded his lead as the playoffs’ leading
scorer with primary assists on Oshie’s power-play
goal that made it 1-0 and Wilson’s that doubled the
lead.
“He just tells me to put my stick on the ice and
he’ll hit it,” Wilson said of Kuznetsov. “It’s a privilege to play with him. He’s one of the best at his
craft.”
Smith-Pelly, who scored the insurance goal to
ice Game 3, kicked the puck from his left skate
to his stick and roofed a shot on Marc-Andre
Fleury with 20.5 seconds left in the ﬁrst period.
Fleury came into the ﬁnal as the Conn Smythe
front-runner for playoff MVP honors but looked
human again by allowing six goals on 23 shots at a
defense that has often left him vulnerable.
Fleury called the loss “frustrating and demoralizing.” Coach Gerard Gallant was quick to absolve
his goaltender of blame.
“At least ﬁve of the six goals were wide-open
nets,” Gallant said. “Nothing he could do on
them.”
Kuznetsov leads all playoff scorers with 31
points, Ovechkin is tied for the goal lead with 14
and Holtby showed again his ability to alter the
course of a game. Holtby got some good fortune
See CAPITALS | 7

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy junior Josh Faro prepares to release a pitch during a Division II Southeast District semifinal against Hillsboro on May
14 at Rannow Field in The Plains, Ohio.

Faro named to All-Ohio squads
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Gallia Academy junior
Josh Faro was the Ohio
Valley Publishing area’s
lone selection to the
2018 Ohio High School
Baseball Coaches Association all-state baseball
squads, as voted on by
member coaches in the
Buckeye State.
Faro, the ace starter
for the 12-12 Blue Devils
this spring, posted a 9-1
overall mark with a 1.13
ERA and 108 strikeouts while walking only
17 hitters. Faro’s lone
setback came in eight
innings at the Division II
district semiﬁnal as Hillsboro won 1-0.
The southpaw was
named to the Division II
second team. Faro — an
all-district and All-OVC
ﬁrst team honoree this
season — is a ﬁrst-time
recipient of All-Ohio
accolades in baseball.
Eastern, Southern,
River Valley, Meigs and
South Gallia did not have
player chosen in their
respective divisions.
2018 OHSBCA All-Ohio
Baseball Teams
D-II First Team
PITCHERS: Joel Roediger, Wapakoneta; Zach
Losey, Tipp City Tippecanoe; Mack Anglin,
Sparta Highland.
CATCHERS: Nate
Miller, Bryan; Emma
Lopez, Alliance.

FIRST BASE: Isaac
Beam, Chillicothe Zane
Trace; Spencer Woolley,
Canﬁeld.
INFIELD: Avery Fisher, Ontario; Bryce Ray,
Bellevue; Preston Eisnaugle, Plain City Jonathan
Alder; Logan Tonkovich,
Cadiz Harrison Central;
Quinton Roach, Kenton
Ridge.
OUTFIELD: Joey
Velazquez, Cols. St.
Francis DeSales; Don
Goodes, Wapakoneta;
Dominic Pilolli, Canﬁeld;
Brady Emerson, New
Concord John Glenn.
UTILITY: Alex Brill,
Oberlin Firelands.

OUTFIELD: Bryce
Zuppe, Louisville; Alec
Taylor, Steubenville; Jack
Amendola, Chagrin Falls;
Nate Stone, Granville.
UTILITY: Harley
Patterson, Chillicothe
Unioto; Manny Vorhees,
Wapakoneta.

Coach of the Year:
Bruce Cahill, Tippecanoe.

D-II Honorable Mention
Brant Alazaus, West
Branch; Drew Batson,
Wash. CH Miami Trace;
Jared Burick, Tallmadge;
Cory Burroughs, Canal
Fulton Northwest;
Andrew Clelland, Cadiz
Harrison Central; Seth
Gergely, Tallmadge; A.J.
King, Cin. Indian Hill;
Evan Lacey, Oberlin Firelands; Cole Newbauer,
Chagrin Falls; Logan
Smith, Plain City Jonathan Alder; Ben Vore,
Lexington; Brady Wallace, Wash. CH Miami
Trace.

D-II Second Team
PITCHERS: Paul Szalay, New Concord John
Glenn; Josh Faro, Gallia
Academy; Greg Gilbert,
Cols. St. Francis DeSales.
CATCHERS: Cole
Andrews, Cols. Bishop
Watterson; Colin Ransom, Overlin Firelands.
FIRST BASE: Luke
Rawlins, Cols. Bishop
Hartley.
INFIELD: Stephen
Krause, Wilmington;
Kyle Zaluski, Chagrin
Falls; Phillip Glasser,
Tallmadge; Dalton Burcher, Indian Valley.

D-III First Team
PITCHERS: Jack
Laird, Elyria Catholic;
Andrew Russell, Champion; Caden Cooper, Milan
Edison.
CATCHERS: Mike
Zeuli, Kirtland; Cameron
Svada, Madison.
FIRST BASE: Cole
Dyer, Wheelersburg.
INFIELD: Joey Torok,
Kirtland; Andrew Miller,
Berlin Hiland; Dylan
Polen, Loudonville; Jacob
Wenning, Coldwater;
Dante Tucci, Sandy Valley.
OUTFIELD: Leighton

Player of the Year:
Joey Velazquez, Cols.
St. Francis DeSales.

Banjoff, Elyria Catholic;
Jay Luikart, Hillsdale;
Dylan Hand, Northeastern; Trey Smith, Cin.
Country Day.
UTILITY: Trey Williams, Hillsdale; Aidan
Endsley, Anna.
Player of the Year:
Mike Zeuli, Kirtland.
Coach of the Year:
Luke Smrdel, Kitland.
D-III Second Team
PITCHERS: Cade
Brintlinger, West Jefferson; Drake Batcho,
Champion; Nick Thwaits,
Ft. Recovery.
CATCHERS: Bryant
Lung, North Adams;
Thayne Ocel, Rootstown.
FIRST BASE: Shane
Gray, West Jefferson.
INFIELD: Reid Davis,
Middletown Madison;
Peyton Lane, National
Trail; Jake Pickerel,
Eastwood; Logan Fisher,
Loudonville.
OUTFIELD: Connor
Pack, Fairbanks; Jake
Moore, Carlisle; Ryan
Hershberger, Berlin
Hiland; Jake Boyd, West
Jefferson.
UTILITY: Connor Galloway, Piketon; Brenden
Hershberger, Crestwood.
D-III Honorable Mention
Cade Bocs, Eastwood;
Manny Camacho, Waynedale; Trey Carter, Wheelersburg; Noah Edwards,
See ALL-OHIO | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

MLB

Boston
New York
Tampa Bay
Toronto
Baltimore

W
41
38
28
26
17

Cleveland
Detroit
Minnesota
Kansas City
Chicago

W
30
29
26
21
18

Seattle
Houston
Los Angeles
Oakland
Texas

W
37
37
33
31
25

Atlanta
Washington
Philadelphia
New York
Miami

W
35
33
31
27
20

Milwaukee
Chicago
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati

W
37
33
32
30
21

Arizona
Colorado
San Francisco
Los Angeles
San Diego

W
31
30
30
29
28

All Times EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
19 .683
—
—
18 .679
1
—
30 .483 12
7½
33
.441 14½
10
41 .293 23
18½
Central Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
28
.517
—
—
32
.475 2½
8
30 .464
3
8½
39 .350 10
15½
39
.316 11½
17
West Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
22 .627
—
—
24 .607
1
—
28
.541
5
4
29
.517 6½
5½
37 .403 13½
12½
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
25 .583
—
—
25 .569
1
—
26 .544 2½
1½
30
.474 6½
5½
39 .339 14½
13½
Central Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
23
.617
—
—
23 .589
2
—
25
.561 3½
½
29 .508 6½
3½
39 .350 16
13
West Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
28 .525
—
—
29 .508
1
3½
30 .500 1½
4
30 .492
2
4½
34 .452 4½
7

L10
7-3
7-3
5-5
3-7
2-8

Str Home
W-2 20-8
L-1 22-9
L-4 11-13
W-1 12-17
L-7 10-18

Away
21-11
16-9
17-17
14-16
7-23

L10
6-4
7-3
5-5
4-6
3-7

Str Home
L-3 18-11
W-1 20-14
W-4 15-13
L-2 10-21
L-1 10-19

Away
12-17
9-18
11-17
11-18
8-20

L10
8-2
4-6
5-5
5-5
5-5

Str Home
W-4 20-12
L-2 18-13
W-2 15-18
W-1 15-15
L-1 11-19

Away
17-10
19-11
18-10
16-14
14-18

L10
6-4
7-3
3-7
2-8
1-9

Str Home
L-1 16-12
L-1 12-14
L-3
19-9
L-4 12-17
L-6 10-18

Away
19-13
21-11
12-17
15-13
10-21

L10
6-4
8-2
6-4
3-7
4-6

Str Home
L-1 18-11
W-4 15-11
W-2 18-12
L-2 17-13
L-2
9-19

Away
19-12
18-12
14-13
13-16
12-20

L10
6-4
4-6
6-4
7-3
7-3

Str Home
L-1 19-13
L-4 11-16
W-5 18-10
W-3 14-17
W-3 17-20

Away
12-15
19-13
12-20
15-13
11-14

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Monday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees 7, Detroit 4, 1st game
Detroit 4, N.Y. Yankees 2, 2nd game
L.A. Angels 9, Kansas City 6
Tuesday’s Games
Minnesota 4, Chicago White Sox 2, 1st
game
Tampa Bay at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Baltimore at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.
Detroit at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
Milwaukee at Cleveland, 7:10 p.m.
Oakland at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 8:10
p.m., 2nd game
Seattle at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Kansas City at L.A. Angels, 10:07 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Tampa Bay (TBD) at Washington (Roark
2-6), 1:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Bundy 3-7) at N.Y. Mets
(Wheeler 2-4), 1:10 p.m.
Milwaukee (Anderson 4-4) at Cleveland
(Carrasco 6-4), 1:10 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Monday’s Games
San Francisco 10, Arizona 3
San Diego 11, Atlanta 4
Tuesday’s Games
L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Baltimore at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.
Colorado at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Milwaukee at Cleveland, 7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.
Miami at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Atlanta at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
Arizona at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Tampa Bay (TBD) at Washington (Roark
2-6), 1:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Bundy 3-7) at N.Y. Mets
(Wheeler 2-4), 1:10 p.m.
Milwaukee (Anderson 4-4) at Cleveland
(Carrasco 6-4), 1:10 p.m.
Atlanta (Foltynewicz 5-3) at San Diego
(TBD), 3:40 p.m.
Arizona (Buchholz 1-1) at San Francisco
(Stratton 7-3), 3:45 p.m.

All-Ohio

D-IV Second Team
PITCHERS: Bo Smith,
Seneca East; Evan Brill,
Whiteoak; Sebastian Lay,
Jackson-Milton.
CATCHERS: Trevor
McGraw, Wellington;
Collin Overholt, Lincolnview.
FIRST BASE: Bryce
Kennedy, Sidney Lehman
Catholic.
INFIELD: Chayten
Overholt, Lincolnview;
Chase Carraher, Whiteoak; Logan Adams, Belpre; Grant Vera, Calvert
Catholic; Jacob Webb,
Seneca East.
OUTFIELD: Jackson
Goulter, Centerburg; Justin Stropky, StrasburgFranklin; Ryan Bertke,
New Bremen; Kurt Maxwell, Norwalk St. Paul;
Levi Godwin, DeGraff
Riverside.
UTILITY: Ty Clark,
Crestline.

From page 6

Genoa; Jared Eichelberger, Sandy Valley; Tristan
Haught, Richmond
Edison; Garrett Hurd,
Portsmouth West; Casey
Jones, Brookville; Darius
Jordan, Minford; Macky
McDonald, Paint Valley;
Chris Reilly, Beachwood;
Bryce Roberts, Milan
Edison; Doug Shaffer,
South Point; Connor
Shields, West Jefferson;
Tristan Sipple, Madison;
Fred Sisco, Gibsonburg;
Wyatt Smith, Wynford;
Caleb Stone, Wynford;
Ryan Strittmather, Elyria
Catholic; Ryan Weaver,
Waynedale; Tyler York,
Newark Catholic.
D-IV First Team
PITCHERS: Trey
Bame, Carey; Owen Recker, Kalida; Wes Earles,
Southeastern.
CATCHERS: Zach
Hawkins, St. Thomas
Aquinas; Alex Alger,
Dalton.
FIRST BASE: Zach
Kreais, Hopewell-Loudon.
INFIELD: Luke Vonderhaar, New Bremen; Nate
Karaffa, Toronto; Traeten
Hamilton, Whiteoak;
Zach Saffell, Fisher
Catholic.
OUTFIELD: Jared
Huelsman, Minster;
Nolan Clegg, Toronto;
Caleb West, Whiteoak;
Alec Zoeller, New Reigel;
Ryan Luttmer, St. Henry.
UTILITY: Hunter
Cohee, Russia.
Player of the Year:
Nolan Clegg, Toronto.
Coach of the Year:
Joey Roark, Carey.

D-IV Honorable Mention
Ian Ashby, Lake Ridge
Academy; Seth Bailey, Plymouth; Caden
Brown, Ayersville; Luke
Carper, Norwalk St.
Paul; Josh Dentinger,
Buckeye Central; Jacob
Greer, Hicksville; Jay
Knapke, St. Henry;
Rickie Lacy, Seneca
East; Daylon Lange,
St. Henry; Alex Lehmkuhl, Minster; Mason
Lehr, Whiteoak; Jack
Nash, Rosecrans; Mitch
Niedenthal, StrasburgFranklin; Jake Roach,
Lake Ridge Academy;
Easton Roark, Carey;
Gavin Robbins, Grove
City Christian; Nick
Sninchak, Toronto; Cameron Summers, Lisbon
Anderson; Brayden Wentling, Carey.

Tri-County Junior
Golf schedule
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The schedule for the 2018
Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf League has
been released.
The tour ofﬁcially begins on Wednesday, June 20,
at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis. Age groups for
both young ladies and young men are 10 and under,
11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
The remaining tournaments, courses and dates
of play are as follows: Monday, June 25, at Meigs
County Golf Course in Pomeroy; Monday, July 2, at
Riverside Golf Course in Mason; Tuesday, July 10,
at Meigs County Golf Course in Pomeroy; and Monday, July 16, at Riverside Golf Course in Mason.
The fee for each tournament is $10 per player.
A small lunch is included with the fee and will be
served at the conclusion of play each week. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. with play starting at 9 a.m.
Please contact Jeff Slone at 740-256-6160, Jan Haddox at 304-675-3388, or Bob Blessing 304-675-6135
if you can contribute or have questions concerning
the tour.

From page 6

Calif., led the team with
16 doubles and 62 walks.
A native of Newcastle,
Okla., Cerny led all
NAIA pitchers with 33
wins and ranked third in
opponent batting average
(.164), strikeouts (298)
and total innings pitched
(238.0), and seventh in
ERA (1.15). She ﬁnished
her freshman campaign
with a 33-4 record and 12

shutouts.
Cerny rolled off sevenstraight winning decisions to end the year
and was named World
Series MVP after leading
her team to its ﬁrst-ever
national championship.
She pitched all of the
team’s 30 innings in the
event, holding opponents
to a .193 batting average
against, posted a 1.17
ERA and struck out 27
batters.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Kiwanis Juniors
Golf Tournament

GAHS Youth
Baseball Camp

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Browns sign LB
Mychal Kendricks

Bowl champion Philadelphia
Eagles.
Hendricks’ ofﬁcial signing
ends a strange sequence of denials about going to Cleveland and
contradictory messages coming
CLEVELAND (AP) — The
from his agent.
Browns signed free agent lineThe 27-year-old started 13
backer Mychal Kendricks, who
started last season for the Super regular-season games last season

Capitals
From page 6

from the post on shots
by Alex Tuch, Neal and
Brayden McNabb, but
he also had not allowed
a goal in more than 62
minutes stretching back
to Game 3.
“We obviously got
some breaks at the
start of the game,”
Holtby said. “Honestly
I thought (Neal’s shot)
was in, my angle, and

somehow it didn’t go
in.”
Somehow, the Capitals have turned around
their results at home,
winning their past
three in Washington
after losing ﬁve of
their ﬁrst eight. This
one got chippy at the
end when Oshie broke
Vegas defenseman
Colin Miller’s nose on
a hit and was given a
game-ending 10-minute
misconduct along with
Golden Knights forwards Deryk Engelland

and all three during the Eagles’
postseason title run. He underwent ankle surgery in March
and Philadelphia released him
on May 22.
Kendricks also visited with
Minnesota and Oakland. Brother Eric starts at linebacker for
the Vikings.

and Ryan Reaves.
“It is not ideal, but it
is the Stanley Cup ﬁnals
and everyone wants to
win,” Backstrom said.
Pierre-Edouard Bellemare said he and his
Vegas teammates can’t
win three games in one
night, so they have no
choice but to focus on
the next opportunity to
stave off elimination.
Coach Barry Trotz
wants his players to
relax and not think too
much about the chance
in front of them.

“You have the opportunity to do something
special as a group, but
it’s going to be the
hardest thing to do,
the hardest game to
win because there’s
a very good team on
the other side, a very
proud team,” Trotz
said. “They’re great in
their building. We’re not
scared of their building.
We’ve proved it that
we’re very good on the
road and we’re going
to go there and put our
best effort in there.”

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Wheel of
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
(N)
Fortune (N)
Daily Mail
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
TV
News (N)
Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing inBBC World Nightly
News:
Business
depth analysis of current
events. (N)
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition

WSAZ News
(WSAZ)
3 (N)
WTAP News
(WTAP)
at Six (N)
ABC 6 News
(WSYX)
at 6pm (N)
Arthur

6 PM

NBC Nightly
News (N)
NBC Nightly
News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
Travels With
Darley

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

American Ninja Warrior "Los Angeles City Qualifiers"
Reverie "Bond. Jane Bond."
Competitors face two new obstacles in Los Angeles. (N)
(N)
American Ninja Warrior "Los Angeles City Qualifiers"
Reverie "Bond. Jane Bond."
Competitors face two new obstacles in Los Angeles. (N)
(N)
NBA
NBA Basketball Playoffs Golden State Warriors at
Jimmy
Kimmel (N) Countdwn (L) Cleveland Cavaliers Site: Quicken Loans Arena (L)
Ken Burns: America's Storyteller Join in a tribute to the Whole Life Plan Dr.
acclaimed filmmaker and a look at the upcoming 'The
Perlmutter provides a
Vietnam War.'
practical lifestyle program.
Jimmy
NBA
NBA Basketball Playoffs Golden State Warriors at
Kimmel (N) Countdwn (L) Cleveland Cavaliers Site: Quicken Loans Arena (L)
SEAL Team
SEAL Team "Boarding
Code Black "Step Up" (N)
Party"
Eyewitness News at 10
MasterChef "The Judges Do MasterChef "Home State
Battle, Pt. 3" (N)
Heroes" (N)
p.m. (N)
Nature "Sex, Lies and Butterflies" Today
The Highwaymen Live at Nassau
around 20,000 different species of
Coliseum The Highwaymen shine in this
butterflies inhabit the globe.
1990 performance at Nassau Coliseum.
SEAL Team
SEAL Team "Boarding
Code Black "Step Up" (N)
Party"

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Last Man St. Last Man St.
24 (ROOT) In Depth (N) Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) (5:00) Jump Horn (N)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)

Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

noon, and the campers will receive basic fundamental instruction from the GAHS baseball coach staff
and players. The cost is $50 per camper and there
is a family package that costs $40 apiece for two
or more children, and each camper will receive a
t-shirt. There will also be daily competitions and a
Camper of the Week award will also be presented on
the ﬁnal day of camp.
For more information, contact GAHS coach Justin
Bailey at 740-339-0318.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Cliffside Golf Course
will be hosting the 10th annual Kiwanis Juniors
at Cliffside Golf Tournament for junior golfers on
Thursday, July 12, starting at 10 a.m. Registration
will be from 9 a.m. until 9:45.
This is an individual stroke play tournament
open to golfers age 10-or-under to 18 years old.
The participants will be divided into four divisions, 10-under, 11-12, 13-15, and 16-18.
Entry fee is $20 for players 12-and-under, and
$30 for players 13-18. Clubhouse certiﬁcates and
individual awards will be presented to the topthree places in each division.
Cart and meal passes will be available for spectators for $15 to follow kids 13-and-older and $10
to follow kids 12-and-under, so that they may folCENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy base- low the tournament and eat with the kids.
To enter please contact the Cliffside clubhouse
ball program will be holding a youth baseball camp
for any boy entering grades 3-6 on Monday, June 11, at 740-446-4653, or Ed Caudill at 740-245-5919 or
through Wednesday, June 13, at Bob Eastman Field 740-645-4381, or by email at rbncaudill@yahoo.
com. Please leave player’s name, age as of July 12,
on the campus of GAHS.
2017 and the school they are currently attending.
The three-day event will run from 9 a.m. until

42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)

NAIA

Wednesday, June 6, 2018 7

57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St.
MLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park (L)
Postgame
Pirates Ball
SportsCenter (N)
Countdown NCAA Softball Division I Tournament (if necessary) (L)
Interrupt (N) NCAA Track &amp; Field Division I Championship Men's and Women's Outdoor Site: Hayward Field (L)
Little Women: LA "Lil Panty Little Women: LA "Get
Little Women: LA - A Little Little Women: LA "Stage Fright and
(:35) Women
Droppers"
Happy"
Extra "The Ultimatum" (N) Heartache" (N)
(N)
The Fosters "Where the
Pocahontas (1995, Animated) Voices of Mel
(:05)
A Walk to Remember (2002, Romance) Shane
Gibson, David Ogden Stiers, Irène Bédard. TVG
West, Daryl Hannah, Mandy Moore. TVPG
Heart Is" (F) (N)
Mom
Mom
Friends
Friends
CMT Music Awards Little Big Town hosts this year's country music
Pitch
Perfect TV14
awards show.
Loud House Loud House H.Danger
H.Danger
The Princess Diaries (‘01, Fam) Julie Andrews. TVPG
Friends
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "Care" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Ridicule" Law&amp;O: SVU "Terrorized" SVU "Making a Rapist"
Colony (N)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Frontal (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time (L)
CNN Tonight
NCIS:NO "No Man's Land" NCIS:NO "Second Chances"
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (‘16, Act) Henry Cavill, Ben Affleck. TVPG
(4:25)
The Bourne
The Shawshank Redemption (‘94, Dra) Morgan Freeman, Tim Robbins. A
(:05)
The Perfect
Ultimatum TV14
banker is wrongly convicted of a double murder and is sent to prison for life. TV14
Storm TVPG
Chopper "Shaq Bike"
Chopper "Welcome Back" American Chopper
To Be Announced
Sticker Shock (N)
Storage
Storage
S. Wars "Dr. Storage Wars: Motor Mayhem A locker hides a landlocked vessel and Barry goes wild
Storage
Wars
Wars
Wars
Strangebid" for some new wheels. (N)
Master "Wine Party Pool" Pool Kings
Pool Kings
Insane Pools DeepEnd
Insane Pools: Deep "Coral Reef and Jungle Oasis" (N)
NCIS "Left for Dead"
NCIS "Eye Spy" An officer is NCIS "My Other Left Foot" NCIS "One Shot, One Kill" NCIS "Bete Noir"
found murdered.
CSI: Miami "Nailed"
CSI "Urban Hellraisers"
CSI: Miami "Shattered"
CSI: Miami "Payback"
CSI: Miami "The Score"
Botched "I Love New York" E! News (N)
Botched "Foreign Bodies" Botched (N)
Botched
(:25) M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
CMT Music Awards Little Big Town hosts this year's awards show. (L)
King-Queens
Southern Justice "Truth or Drugs, Inc. "Cancun Spring Drugs, Inc. "The Real
Drugs, Inc.: The Fix
Lockdown "End of the Line"
Consequences"
Break"
Wolves of Wall Street"
(N)
"Tennessee Dope" (N)
NASCAR (N)
NASCAR Whelen Series (N) Dark Horses
American Ninja Warrior
American Ninja Warrior
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
UFC Main Event (N)
UFC Tonight (N)
Ultimate Fighter 27
Ultimate Fighter 27 (N)
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Rise of the Superbombs Non-nuclear bombs are driving SIX "Dua" (N)
the new arms race. (N)
Wives "Reunion Part 2"
The Real Housewives
Real Housewives (N)
The Real Housewives (N)
The Real Housewives
(4:35) The Cookout TV14
Baby Boy (2001, Drama) Omar Gooding, Snoop Dogg, Tyrese Gibson. TVMA
Rush Hour TVPG
Property "Mad About Plaid" Property "Shaky Start"
Property Brothers
Brother vs. Brother (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(:15)
Tomorrowland (‘15, Adv) George Clooney, Judy Greer, Britt Robertson. A
G.I. Joe: Retaliation
The Expanse
teenager and a jaded inventor set out on a dangerous journey to a futuristic place. TVPG "Intransigence" (N)
Channing Tatum. TV14

6 PM
(4:20) King

6:30

7 PM

Real Sports With Bryant
Gumbel

7:30
Vice News
Tonight (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

The Hitman's Bodyguard (‘17, Act) Samuel L. Jackson,
400 (HBO) Arthur:
Ryan Reynolds. A notorious hitman must work with the
Legend of t...
agent who's been his enemy for years to stay alive. TVMA
(4:30) Why
(:25)
The Outsiders A group of
The Mummy (‘99, Adv) Rachel Weisz, Brendan
450 (MAX) Him? TVMA teens are forced to hide out after a deadly Fraser. Adventurers inadvertently resurrect a malevolent
confrontation with a rival gang. TVPG
force with unspeakable power. TV14
(5:45)
Kill Bill: Vol. 2 (‘04, Act) David Carradine, Uma (:15)
Transporter 3 (‘08, Act) Natalya Rudakova,
500 (SHOW) Thurman. An assassin continues her quest for vengeance
Jason Statham. A driver has been pressured into
against her former boss and his associates. TVM
transporting the kidnapped daughter of an official. TV14

10 PM

10:30

Wyatt Cenac Succession
"Celebration"
(:55)
Born on the
Fourth of July (‘89, Bio)
Tom Cruise. TVMA
The Fourth Estate "The
Trump Bump"

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Discovery signs $2 billion rights deal with PGA Tour
NEW YORK (AP) —
Discovery Inc. signed a
$2 billion agreement that
gives it media rights to
PGA Tour programming
for its 220 markets outside the United States.
The deal announced
Monday is designed
to allow Discovery to
deliver golf around the
world on every screen
and device. It’s the
PGA Tour’s latest effort

to expand its fan base
around the world.
The 12-year deals
starts next year and runs
through 2030.
The PGA Tour has
U.S. television deals
with NBC Sports and
CBS Sports for weekend
coverage, and with Comcast-owned Golf Channel
for weekday and some
full tournaments in the
fall and in January.

The tour said the
agreement gives Discovery live rights outside
the U.S. to some 2,000
hours of PGA Tour
content. That includes
all six circuits the PGA
Tour runs, such as the
PGA Tour Champions
and smaller tours in
China, Canada and Latin
America.
The four majors have
separates broadcast

deals with CBS (Masters
and PGA Championship), NBC (British
Open) and Fox Sports
(U.S. Open).
Along with live linear
rights to its global markets, the partnership
with Discovery includes
creating a dedicated,
PGA Tour-branded video
streaming service using
Discovery’s direct-toconsumer product and

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stream platform outside
the U.S.
David Zaslav, president and CEO of Discovery, said the relationship
will create “the new
global Home of Golf.”
Alex Kaplan, a former
NBA media executive
who most recently
worked for Eurosport
Digital, will be in charge
of Discovery’s partnership with the tour.

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its platform as home to
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Eurosport Player
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The tour said Discovery expects to invest
more than $2 billion over
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, June 6, 2018 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

Written By Brian &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

"Y $AVE 'REEN

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Tigers draft Auburn right-hander Casey Mize
SECAUCUS, N.J. (AP)
— Casey Mize went from
undrafted three years ago
all the way to No. 1.
The Detroit Tigers
selected the Auburn
right-hander with the ﬁrst
pick in the Major League
Baseball draft Monday
night. The announcement
at MLB Network studios
marked the second time
the Tigers led off the
draft, and ﬁrst since they
took Rice pitcher Matt
Anderson in 1997.
The 6-foot-3, 220pound Mize had long
been linked to the Tigers,
and this season he
pitched his way to the
top spot on the board.
Mize wasn’t chosen by
any organization out of
high school three years
ago, but developed into a
potential big league ace
while in college.
“It means a ton,” he
said in an interview on
MLB Network’s broadcast. “I can’t describe this
feeling right now.”
Mize is 10-5 with a
2.95 ERA and 151 strikeouts with just 12 walks
in 109 2/3 innings while
helping the Tigers to
the NCAA Tournament
super regionals. He has
outstanding command of
four pitches, including a
fastball that hovers in the
mid-90s (mph), and his
wicked split changeup
creates lots of swings and
misses.
Mize became the seventh player to go from
undrafted in high school
to the No. 1 pick, and
ﬁrst since Stephen Strasburg went to the Washington Nationals in 2009.
In a statement, Tigers
general manager Al Avila

said the club is conﬁdent
Mize “will become a pillar in our player development system that’s going
to bring winning baseball
to Detroit for seasons to
come.”
“Being a college pitcher
— especially coming
from the Southeastern
Conference — we know
Casey has seen elite
competition before,” he
added.
With the second selection, San Francisco took
slugging Georgia Tech
catcher Joey Bart, the
Atlantic Coast Conference player of the year.
Wichita State third
baseman Alec Bohm was
the ﬁrst of six players in
attendance to be drafted,
going third overall to
Philadelphia.
Oregon State second
baseman Nick Madrigal
— at 5-foot-7, 160 pounds
— went fourth to the Chicago White Sox.
Rounding out the top
ﬁve was Cincinnati,
which took Florida third
baseman Jonathan India.
Oakland created a
major buzz at No. 9 and
shook up some draft
boards by tabbing speedy
Oklahoma outﬁelder —
and quarterback — Kyler
Murray, the favorite to
replace Heisman Trophy
winner Baker Mayﬁeld
this season as the Sooners’ starter on the gridiron.
Shortly after he was
picked by Oakland, Murray said he still plans to
play football for Oklahoma this year.
“Right now, I’m really
not focused on the football-baseball situation,”
Murray said on a confer-

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Former QB Oliver Luck to
become XFL commissioner
NEW YORK (AP) — Former NFL quarterback
Oliver Luck is leaving his high-ranking position at
the NCAA to become commissioner of the XFL,
the second edition of professional wrestling mogul
Vince McMahon’s football league.
McMahon announced the hire four months after
unveiling plans to relaunch the XFL, which folded
in 2001 after its only season. The new XFL is
scheduled to begin in 2020.
Luck, the father of Colts quarterback Andrew
Luck, played four seasons for the Houston Oilers
after being drafted in the second round out of
West Virginia in 1982. He graduated from University of Texas law school in 1987.
He went on to a successful career in sports
management in the professional and college ranks.
He joined the NCAA in 2014 as executive vice
president of regulatory affairs and strategic partnerships.

Former OSU player arrested
for assaulting officer
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) — A former Ohio State
and Chicago Bears offensive lineman has been
charged with felony assault of a police ofﬁcer.
Charges against 33-year-old Kirk Barton were
ﬁled Monday after his arrest outside the Bogey
Bar &amp; Grill in Dublin.
Police say Barton was at the bar Friday when
management asked deputies to remove him
because the 6-foot-6-inch man was intoxicated,
stumbling and knocking people over.
The Delaware County Sheriff’s ofﬁce says deputies escorted Barton to a taxi van without incident, but he couldn’t provide his address.
Police retrieved his license, and ofﬁcers and the
taxi driver were trying to determine the address
when police say Barton slammed the van’s sliding
door on a deputy’s arm. It is unclear whether the
deputy suffered any injuries.

LeBron appearing on cover
of NBA 2K video game
CLEVELAND (AP) — LeBron James is being
honored as a gamer — on and off the ﬂoor.
Cleveland’s star will appear on the cover of NBA
2K, the popular video game that’s celebrating its
20th anniversary. The cover will include inspirational words chosen by James, who is chasing a
fourth NBA title.
James says he’s humbled to be chosen for the
20th anniversary cover “of a game I’ve played
and loved since I was a little kid. We were able
to do something really unique for the cover that
represents everything that drives me and inspires
me — from my family to where I come from and
words I live by.”

ence call. “I’m just soaking in the night.”
But when asked again
about the coming football
season, Murray said he
had spoken to the Athletics about it.
“I will be playing
football this season,” he
insisted.
North Carolina high
school outﬁelder Jordyn
Adams might have to
make the same big decision. He was taken 17th
overall by the Angels, but
has committed to playing
both baseball and football for the University of
North Carolina.
Perhaps the replacement for Giants star
Buster Posey someday,
Bart follows in the footsteps of Matt Wieters
and Jason Varitek — big
league backstops who
also came out of Georgia
Tech.
Bart led the ACC with
a .359 batting average
and topped the Yellow
Jackets with a .632 slugging percentage, 79 hits,
16 home runs, 55 runs
and a .471 on-base percentage. He’s also one of
the country’s best defensive catchers.
Bohm was one of the
top hitters in the draft,
batting .339 with 55 RBIs
and 16 homers — the
most by a Wichita State
player since 2004. He set
a school record with three
grand slams this year.
Bohm had some trouble
buttoning his white Phillies jersey before heading
to the podium to shake
hands with Commissioner Rob Manfred.
“The holes are pretty
tight. It was pretty
tough,” said the 6-foot-5

Bohm, later adding that
his biggest strength is
probably his maturity at
the plate. “I’m just ready
to go play ball.”
Despite his short stature, Madrigal was considered by many to be the
best overall hitter in the
class. He rebounded nicely for the Beavers after
missing half the season
with a broken left wrist.
India, the Southeastern
Conference player of
the year for Florida, has
been an offensive force
for the defending College
World Series champions.
He’s the 12th player in
school history to post
20 or more homers, 100
or more RBIs and 30 or
more stolen bases in his
career.
The Mets took the
ﬁrst high school player,
selecting Wisconsin
prep outﬁelder Jarred
Kelenic sixth overall.
The left-handed-hitting
Kelenic was the MVP of
the Team USA Under-18
squad last September at
the Pan American Games
in Canada while batting
.404 and leading the team
in extra-base hits.
Tennessee high school
lefty Ryan Weathers, son
of former major league
pitcher David Weathers,
was the No. 7 pick by San
Diego.
Florida high school
righty Carter Stewart
was the second player in
attendance to be selected,
going eighth overall to
Atlanta. It also made for
a heartwarming moment
as 16-year-old Luke Terry,
a one-armed high school
catcher from Tennessee
and a lifelong Braves
fan, announced Stewart’s

Butch Dill | AP

Auburn pitcher Casey Mize throws a pitch during the first inning
of a Southeastern Conference tournament NCAA baseball game
against Texas A&amp;M on May 24 in Hoover, Ala.

name at the podium.
South Alabama outﬁelder Travis Swaggerty
went to Pittsburgh with
the 10th pick. He hit
.296 with 13 homers, 38
RBIs and a whopping 54
walks for the Jaguars this
season.
The draft resumes with
rounds 3-10 on Tuesday and concludes with
rounds 11-40 on Wednesday.
Familiar names
The second round
included some players
with famous bloodlines:
Georgia prep outﬁelder
Parker Meadows, brother
of Pirates rookie Austin
Meadows, went 44th to
Detroit; Duke outﬁelder
Grifﬁn Conine, son of
Jeff Conine, went 52nd to

Toronto; and California
high school shortstop
Osiris Johnson, cousin of
Jimmy Rollins and Tony
Tarasco, was taken by
Miami with the next pick.
NOTES: Florida righthander Brady Singer, considered a potential top-3
selection, fell all the way
to Kansas City at No. 18.
… Prep catcher Anthony
Seigler from Georgia, also
an ambidextrous pitcher
in high school, went 23rd
to the Yankees. … The
Dodgers wrapped up the
opening round by taking
Mississippi high school
right-hander J.T. Ginn at
No. 30. … Florida prep
shortstop Xavier Edwards
was the last of the players
in attendance to be selected, going 38th overall to
San Diego.

Dynasty in making? Warriors chase third title
OAKLAND, Calif.
(AP) — Stephen Curry
and coach Steve Kerr’s
Golden State Warriors
have repeatedly said they
want to build something
special for the long haul,
to compete for championships year after year.
LeBron James considers his familiar NBA
Finals opponent among
the best teams ever.
Where the Warriors
stack up if they win a
third championship in
four years will make for
a dynasty debate. And
their domination doesn’t
appear to be ending anytime soon, so if they keep
winning Golden State will
have its place in history.
“As a fan of the NBA,
you could go down the
list of the teams that won
multiple years and just
dominated the league for
stretches of time,” Curry
said.
The Warriors are trying to join Bill Russell’s
Celtics, the Bulls led by
Michael Jordan and the
Lakers’ trio of title runs
fueled by George Mikan
in the 1950s, Magic
Johnson and Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar in the ’80s,
and Shaquille O’Neal and
Kobe Bryant nearly 20
years ago as the only franchises in NBA history to
capture three championships in four years.
The Warriors are halfway there, holding a 2-0
lead against the underdog
Cavs as the series shifts
to Cleveland for Game 3
on Wednesday.
“Listen, Golden State is
one of the best teams I’ve
ever played. It’s one of
the best teams that’s ever
been assembled,” said
James, who is playing in
his eighth straight NBA
Finals and fourth in a row
against Golden State.
Curry, sharp-shooting
Klay Thompson, ﬁery
Draymond Green and
2015 Finals MVP Andre

Mark Lennihan | AP file

Los Angeles Lakers’ Magic Johnson (32) goes for a layup while
Boston Celtics’ Kevin McHale, right, comes up from behind during
fourth-period NBA action in Boston on Dec. 12, 1987. Stephen
Curry and the Golden State Warriors are trying to join Bill Russell’s
Celtics, the Bulls led by Michael Jordan and the Lakers’ trio of title
runs fueled by George Mikan in the 1950s, Johnson and Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar in the ’80s and Shaquille O’Neal and Kobe Bryant
nearly 20 years ago as the only franchises in NBA history to
capture three championships in four years.

Iguodala make up an AllStar-studded squad trying to repeat after James
thwarted that quest two
years ago when the Cavs
stopped the defending
champs. Kevin Durant
bolted from Oklahoma
City to join the cast last
season.
“You look at it, they’ve
got four Hall of Famers
on their team in Klay,
Dray, Steph and KD.
They’ve got a Finals
MVP that comes off
their bench,” James said
in reference to Iguodala.
“… I don’t know where
they will fall in my book,
but they will have a nice
chapter.”
Not everybody is ready
to crown the Warriors
as a dynasty, not just yet
anyway. Not even if they
win the title this year.
“I don’t like to go

dynasty stuff, they’ve
been the team of the
decade,” said Gary Payton, the longtime Seattle
SuperSonics point guard
who played 17 seasons
through 2007. “That’s
what it is. They’ve been
doing their thing. When
we get into a dynasty
is Michael Jordan and
them winning six, that’s
a dynasty. The Golden
State Warriors (would
have) won three out of
four, that’s great.
“It’s coming to be a
dynasty. If you win a
couple more, then you’re
talking about a dynasty.
So three of them is in the
right stage and the right
movement to becoming a
dynasty, yes.”
The defending champions are playing in a
fourth straight ﬁnals
chasing a repeat they

couldn’t pull off in 2016
after capturing the franchise’s ﬁrst title in 40
years during 2014-15
with Kerr as a rookie
head coach.
TNT analyst and former player Charles Barkley wants nothing to do
with dynasty talk regarding the Warriors.
“We don’t have any
dynasties. It’s been a
long time since we’ve
had a dynasty,” Barkley
said. “The Bulls won
six, the Spurs won ﬁve.
We’ve had a lot of really
good teams. I think
the only dynasty is the
Spurs. They’ve been
great for 20 years. The
Warriors are not going
to win. Winning two
in four years is not a
dynasty.”
Golden State would
love nothing more than
to continue building
momentum as the franchise approaches the
opening of its new San
Francisco arena, Chase
Center , in summer 2019
if all remains on schedule. That leaves one last
season at Oracle Arena.
B.J. Armstrong earned
titles alongside Jordan
with the Bulls from
1991-93. If the Warriors
win another, they will
join dynasty status in
Armstrong’s mind.
“They’re right there,”
Armstrong said. “For
them to have a sustained
level of excellence like
they’ve had, I don’t take
that for granted and
I think anyone who’s
played or observed this
game knows how difﬁcult that is for one, let
alone to be able to get
here four times and have
an opportunity to win
three speaks for itself. …
“If they win this one,
they’re right up there
with all of the teams for
a dynasty-type caliber
situation up here in
Golden State.”

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